Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Review of Tomato Rhapsody: A Novel of Love, Lust, and Forbidden Fruit

Tomato Rhapsody: A Novel of Love, Lust, and Forbidden Fruit
Aerlinn avatar reviewed E cosi bello! on + 8 more book reviews


Wow. Just wow. I really wasnt sure when I started but I loved it.

Ill never look at tomato sauce the same way again.

It was an extraordinary book. Its a fable about how the tomato came to Europe, and how it overcame the strange, popular prejudice that it was extremely and immediately poisonous, to become inseparable from Italian cuisine. Its also about a wicked stepfather, the oppression of Jews in early Renaissance Europe, the curing of olives, Christopher Columbus, Catholic missionaries in Africa, sanitation, copulation, and celebration. Its a romance (not a love story), basically Romeo and Juliet if the lovers had been older and there had been someone sensible in Fair Verona. Everything in the story has meaning and significance: a donkeys bray, a shaft of sunlight, a drop of holy water. The story is earthy sometimes downright crude as well as golden, rapturous, euphoric and yes, rhapsodic. It is both sprawling and intimate, with a good-sized cast of characters who do not come across as characters; these are people, wildly individual and altogether real.

Some might find the rhyming dialogue cloying, or indeed find it no better than annoying. But I find that the couplets to my inner ear became as natural and simple as, dare I say, Shakespeare. (I was tempted to write an entire review in rhyme, but it would take forever; I just dont have the time.)

Read this book. But first make sure your pantry is well stocked with good olive oil, good bread, eggplant (try the Good Padres idea in Chapter 3 its wonderful), fresh herbs and tomatoes. Definitely tomatoes. Lots of them.